The Copyright Office of the Library of Congress is caught in the middle of a heated online debate about a proposal to limit full use of a new copyright registration Web site, even if temporarily, to only one browser.
Critics decry that the choice of the browser, Microsoft Internet Explorer, shuts out users of other, less popular browsers and operating systems such as Linux and Apple Macintosh. They allege that the agency is ignoring the World Wide Web Consortiums standards for formatting Web sites in favor of designing the site with one vendors product in mind.
Copyright officials say their browser choice is limited by the commercial software package it will be using to manage the registration system, as well as the time needed to test other browsers. They also point out that a planned upgrade will open the system to other browsers.
Under the Family Entertainment and Copyright Act of 2005, the Copyright Office must put a copyright preregistration system in place by Oct. 24. Additional browsers could not be tested in time for the initial rollout.
There was, and is, no intent to endorse a particular vendor. The offices goal is to make the system available to everyone, and therefore to enable frequently used browsers, said Marybeth Peters, the Register of Copyrights.
A notice published Aug. 4 in the Federal Register sparked the debate.
The Copyright Office is quickly ramping up an online system for registering an unpublished work before its commercial distribution. The system will run on Siebel 7.7, from Siebel Systems Inc. of San Mateo, Calif. That system has only been tested to work with Internet Explorer versions 5.1 or later, and America Onlines Netscape 7.02, according to Peters. As a result, the office does not want to guarantee that users can register using other browsers.
Present users of these browsers may experience problems when filing claims, the notice warned. The Web site itself will still be viewable with other browsers. The office is soliciting feedback to find out whether requiring Internet Explorer for registrations would affect users of the system.